welcome

I am so glad you're here.

My Story

I grew up in Iowa, on a small sheep farm, just east of Solon, one cornfield away from the Cedar River. My meanderings throughout my life have taken me into the woods, the mountains, the waterways of Ontario and Vermont.

My journey into the healing arts started in 2002, as I was backpacking through New Zealand, when curiosity lead me to my first Reiki training. I had been teaching ecology as a field naturalist in Vermont and Rhode Island and was trying to figure out where to go next.

I ended up at the Boston School of Shiatsu where I started my path into Chinese Medicine.

I didn’t quite know what I was stumbling into, and I feel blessed to have fallen head over heels in love with the way Chinese Medicine understands health and well-being. After my first five years as a shiatsu practitioner, all of my mentors were five element acupuncturists and the next steps became clear.

I continued my training with a Masters in Acupuncture and Chinese Herbal Studies from the Academy for Five Element Acupuncture in Gainesville, FL. Another five years later, with more than 3,000 hours of study and 700 hours of clinical supervision, I returned home to Iowa City where I have been offering acupuncture, Chinese herbal medicine, and energy bodywork since 2015.

Now, I have more than two decades of experience as an acupuncurist, shiatsu, and reiki practitioner. In these twenty plus years, I have offered more than 12,000 treatments to members of the community.

My roots drink deep in returning to my home in the midwest

to the big open skies and the rolling hills of Iowa

How did I get here?

Chinese Medicine, through herbs, acupuncture, and shiatsu, has been transformative for me in my own life.

I have learned that every choice I make influences the quality of my health.

Our culture seems to have forgotten the interconnectedness of health and well-being.

I am constantly looking to relearn this holistic knowledge.

I have moved through my own journeys of illness, back pain, heartbreak, fatigue, trauma, and more,

 all with the assistance of acupuncture, herbs, and shiatsu.

Having experienced these profound, simple and beautiful treatments myself,

I feel called to share the gifts of deep healing with others,

so that we can all access our truest places of strength.

From this place of strength, we can heal not only ourselves,

but also our communities and the world around us.

I do this work because I believe in a holistic approach to health,

one that empowers each of us to take ownership in our own well-being.

I am a practitioner and lifelong student of Chinese Medicine

because of the rich cultural perspective it brings to understanding health and wellbeing.


Here are the nitty gritty details of my training:

Education, Certification & Licensure

Acupuncture & Chinese Herbal Medicine

Diplomate of Oriental Medicine, National Certification Commission of Acupuncture and Oriental Medicine, 2015 - present

Clinical Integration, Lonny Jarret, Stockbridge, MA, 2018-2020

Spirit of the Points, Thea Elijah, W. Brattleboro, VT 2017

Licensed Acupuncturist, Iowa Medical Board, 2015-present

Masters of Acupuncture 2014, Academy for Five Element Acupuncture, Gainesville, FL

Certificate in Chinese Herbal Medicine 2014, Academy for Five Element Acupuncture, Gainesville, FL 2014

Shiatsu & Asian Bodywork Therapies

Licensed Massage Therapist, Iowa Board of Professional Licensure, 2016

Advanced Shiatsu Training 2005, Charles River School of Shiatsu, Cambridge, MA

Certificate of Shiatsu and Asian Bodywork Therapies 2004, Boston School of Shiatsu, Cambridge, MA

Reiki I & II, Aukland, NZ, Cambridge, MA 2002

Diplomate of Asian Bodywork Therapy, National Certification Commission of Acupuncture and Oriental Medicine, 2005-2013

The Oath of the Acupuncturist

Recited at our graduation ceremony, August, 2014, Gainesville, FL

As a graduate of the Academy for Five Element Acupuncture,
as a practitioner and ongoing student of this medicine,
as modeled by my teachers and mentors,

I promise to follow the way of the great physician.
I will serve to live in harmony with nature and
teach my patients to do the same.

I will stay calm and completely committed while treating.
I will not give way to personal wishes and desires,
but above all else hold and nurture a deep feeling of compassion.

I will be devoted to the task of seeing people
not only as they present themselves in illness,
but as they would be in perfect health and balance.

The goal of my treatments will be helping people live
in full discovery of their true nature,
unique in body, mind, and spirit.

I will cultivate the virtues of the Five Elements:
benevolence, propriety, integrity, appreciation, and wisdom.

I will strive to maintain a clear mind and be willing
to hold myself to the highest standards.

I will not be boastful about my skills and
not driven by greed for material things.

Above all, I will keep an open heart.
As I move on the right path,
I will look forward to great happiness as my reward.

(adapted from The Great Physician by Sun Simiao 581-682)

I stand by these words and honor them every day

in every treatment, with every patient

~ with an attentive heart, Lucy Marsh, LAc

Living In Sync With the Seasons

Each season carries different qualities that affect how you exist in the world.

We can often get swept up in our day to day routines

without noticing the change in seasons,

let alone the impact that it may have on our lives.

When you slow down, making space for awareness and mindfulness,

there can be opportunity to live into greater health and wellbeing.

Qi Gong course descriptiong

A Qi Gong Course Offering – Deep Roots Acupuncture

November 01, 20253 min read

Register May – June 2026

Register Sept – Nov 2026

My Journey into Qi Awareness

Thinking back to the very beginning of my journey into acupuncture, I return to the early 2000’s when I, on a whim – because a book had jumped off a shelf at the bookstore at me – decided to take my Reiki level 1 training. I was travelling through New Zealand on my Odyssey Path, with an intention of where to go next with my work in Outdoor Ed. And since I was off on an adventure – why not try something that my midwestern raised self thought of as too woo and out there for my down to earth, farm raised self?

This seeded the exploration into the sensation of qi, between my hands and in the space surrounding me.

I came home from New Zealand and enrolled in shiatsu school in Boston, not really knowing what I was stumbling into, leaving outdoor education behind me.

As a shiatsu student, we were immediately introduced to finding the meridian pathways in our bodies through stretches, movement, and qi gong. In these practices, I found that sensations between my hands began to wake up – there were magnetic sensations of pushing or pulling, the air felt thick around me, like molasses, my body would tingle and relax, shake and tremble through stagnation and agitation, then settle into a deep sense of solidity and connectedness.

What is Qi Gong?

Qi Gong is a meditative movement with breath, like the familiar form of Tai Chi, that can be found in many practices and movements that open the flow of qi anywhere in the body. While clearing out stagnation and tension, it also is a beautiful form of cultivating energy reserves and increasing your body’s vitality and healing.

The Hun Yuan Primordial Qi form is one that I started practicing in Putney VT with Thomas Garbarino, a student of Ken Cohen, a China scholar and qi gong grandmaster. The work that I did as a shiatsu practitioner began to go more deeply, with new sensations waking up in my hands as I was working with individuals. The fields around individuals, when I tuned in to the qi, became palpable. I could feel where an injury wanted more energy, sometimes six inches from the body, sometimes further out at twenty inches or more.

What will we do?

These are a rich series of exercises that move through movements of cleansing and cultivating. We will start with the foundation of qi gong principles and the first movements and then build on the form with each class.

As a white, cis woman, practicing an Asian medicine, I think often about my responsibility to the awareness of appropriation and to the culture that we have learned from. These are beautiful forms that I look forward to sharing. I don’t have the answers to all the questions, but I honor the teachers and the lineage of the forms, along with all I have learned and the skills I have gained over the years.

Please join me for this series this May and June.

Class size is limited.

Blessings in the flow,

Lucy

Register Here

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Lucy Marsh

Acupuncturist at Deep Roots Acupuncture in Iowa City IA since 2015

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Monday 1:00 - 5:30

Tuesday 10:00 - 1:30

Wednesday 10:00 - 5:30

Thursday 10:00 - 7:00

Tuesdays 11:30 - 1:30

2nd Saturdays 10:00 - noon (1st Saturday alternate schedule)

4th Thursdays 4:30 - 6:30

1222 Rochester Ave, Iowa City, IA 52245, USA